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Page 1: Securin Wter for Food Technic l Assist nce F cilit y ... · 40 SWFF Innov !tors SecurinANNUAL REPORTING!W"ter for Food Technic"l Assist"nce F"cilit y December 2018 Ð May 2019!"#$%&'()*+,%#$%-.)/%&($$#01/%,"'(*2

40 SWFF Innovators

Securing Water for Food Technical Assistance Facility December 2018 – May 2019

ANNUAL REPORTING

This product is made possible through the support of the Securing Water for Food: A Grand Challenge for Development partners: the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Sweden through the Swedish International

Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and the Government of South Africa. It was prepared by The Kaizen Company and does not necessarily reflect the views of the Securing Water for Food partners. Further information about Securing Water for Food can be found at www.securingwaterforfood.org. For more information about the SWFF Technical Assistance Facility, contact [email protected].

SWFF INNOVATOR LOCATIONS (35 COUNTRIES) (2014 – 2019)

HondurasZero Discharge Desalination

PeruIrrigation Scheduling System

ChileSalt Tolerant Quinoa

MalawiFlask-Wall-Mushroom Growing House

BotswanaCommunal Grazing

Systems and Ecorangers

UgandaAquaponics Farming

M-Fodder

Slurry-Separation System

KenyaAgroSolar Irrigation

Hydroponics

Biodegradable Seed Tape

Drought Prediction Tool

Ecorangers and Meat Naturally

M-Fodder

RwandaHydroponics Africa

Slurry-Separation System

EthiopiaBroad Bed and Furrow Maker (BBM)

Slurry-Separation System

Waterpads®

EgyptSalt-Tolerant Quinoa

PakistanSalt Tolerant Potato

TajikistanGreen House Technology

VietnamInternet of Things Platform

for Precision Irrigation

CambodiaTechnology and Farming

Practices Advisory Services

IndonesiaNewSil

The Barsha Pump

IndiaBioEnsure®

Bhungroo

Electrodialysis Reversal (EDR) System

NewSil

Rainmaker

Sponge Irrigation Technology

SWAR

Circular Economy with Black

and Grey Water Recycling

TurkeyWaterpads®

TunisiaThe Buried Diffuser

JordanGroasis Waterbox

RomaniaNewSil

South AfricaBiodegradable Seed Tape

Communal Grazing

Systems and Ecorangers

Drought Prediction Tool

NigeriaWeather Model

SenegalWeather Model

Sierra LeoneAffordable Greenhouses

LiberiaIntegrated Aquaculture

and Crop Production

Burkina FasoIntegrated Aquaculture

and Crop Production

Weather Model

GuineaIntegrated Aquaculture

and Crop Production

LesothoCommunal Grazing

Systems and Ecorangers

MozambiqueAffordable Greenhouses

Flying Sensors

Drought Prediction Tool

MaliThe Barsha Pump

Weather Model

GhanaIntegrated Aquaculture

and Crop Production

Weather Model

TogoWeather Model

MexicoFresh Water Management System

NepalThe Barsha Pump

BangladeshSandbar Cropping

Salt Tolerant Vegetables

PROGRAM TARGETS AND ACTUAL IMPACT (2014 – 2019)TargetActual

2015 2016 2017 2018

3m

2m

1m

6m

5m

4m

AR

EA (H

ECTA

RES

)

0m

Land Under Improved Production (hectares)

7m

6m

8m

9m

5m

4m

3m

2m

1m

0m2015 2016 2017 2018

SA

LES

(US

D)

Product Sales (USD)

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

3m

5m

4m

6m

2m

1m

NU

MB

ER O

F EN

D U

SER

S

IMP

AC

TED

BY

INN

OV

ATI

ON

0m

End Users (farmers)

2015 2016 2017 2018

MA

SS

(TO

NS)

0m

Mass of Crops Grown (tons)

4m

5m

6m

3m

2m

1m

2015 2016 2017 2018

12b

9b

15b

18b

6b

3b

VO

LUM

E (L

ITER

S)

0b

Agricultural Water Consumption Reductions (liters)

2015 2016 2017 2018

3m

2m

1m

5m

4m

6m

8m

7m

1,000m

800m

600m

400m

200m

1,800m

1,600m

1,400m

1,200m

VO

LUM

E (L

ITER

S)

0m

Installed Water StorageCapacity (liters)

2015 2016 2017 2018

2019 20192019

2019 2019 2019

VO

LUM

E (L

ITER

S)

0m

Water Reallocated to the Food Value Chain (liters)

ACTIVE INNOVATORS’ IMPACTS PER $1,000 OF SWFF FUNDING (2014 – 2019)

Number of adopters243 End Users $353 in Sales

1,254,582 Liters 170 Hectares

409,456 Liters

4,887 Liters 401 Tons

549 Hectares

Agricultural water consumptionreductions

Volume of water reallocatedto food value chain

Increase in installedwater storage capacity

Mass of crops grown

Grazing lands impacted

Cropland impacted

Product sales where applicable

SWFF INNOVATOR PIPELINE (2014 – 2019)customer base growth over time

43

AC

TIV

EG

RA

DU

ATE

21 5STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE

ALU

MN

I

Reel Gardening

Aybar

FutureWater

Practical Action – Bangladesh

ICBA

MyRain

World Hope

aQysta

AST

Naireeta Services

Lal Teer Seed

ICU – Peru

IVL SERI

CUT/ITIKI

WGI

Ignitia

CSA – MNP

WASTE Stichting

Green Heat

Hydroponics Africa

Project Alba

SkyFox

Univ. of Malawi

MimosaTEK

Si Technologies

MIT/Tata

Driptech

MetaMeta (Saline Potato)

ICU – Jordan

CEC

Islamic Relief

CSDES

MetaMeta (Waterpads)

ICU – Tunisia

Deutsche Welthungerhilfe

Wageningen

TAHMO

Puralytics

Arcadis

Univ. of Texas – El Paso

0–100 101–1,000 1,001–10,000 10,001–999,999 1,000,000+

INNOVATOR MILESTONE PROGRESS (2014 – 2019)

OVERALL STATUSTECHNICAL INDICATORSNumber of customers/

end users

Agricultural water

consumption reductions

Water reallocated to the

food value chain

Increased water storage

capacity

Hectares of farmland

Hectares of grazing land

Increased crop yields

Mass of crops grown

FINANCEMatching funds &

external leverage

Total product sales

Profit marginNumber of partnerships

leveraged

RESULTS TO DATE6.3 million people

18.6 billion liters

1.78 billion liters

8.44 million liters

4.2 million hectares

615,000 hectares

6% – 80%

6.2 million tons

RESULTS TO DATE$22.2 million

$8.4 million

0% – 60%

299

ON TARGET NOT ON TARGETTARGETS PARTIALLY MET STATUS UNKNOWN

Pro

ject

Alb

a

CS

A –

MN

P

SkyF

ox

Gre

en

Heat

Ign

itia

Hyd

rop

on

ics

Afr

ica

Lal T

eer

Seed

Mim

osa

TEK

Nair

ee

ta S

erv

ice

s

Si Te

chn

olo

gie

s

ICU

– P

eru

WG

I C

UT/

ITIK

I

WA

STE

Sti

chti

ng

PERCENTAGE OF SUPPORT ENGAGEMENTS LEADING TO VALUABLE INNOVATOR OUTCOMES (2015 – 2019)

Source: SWFF Scope of Work Trackern = support engagements

100%

75%

50%

25%

0%2015 2016

52%

89%

n=31

n=38

2017

78%

n=41

2018

90%

n=21

26%

21%

42%

11%

POVERTY LEVELS OF SWFF END USERS ACROSS ALL INNOVATORS (2014 – 2019)

Middle Income

Upper IncomeExtreme Poor

Low-Income Poor

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